I was going to add heater panels under the floor to a room, but now I'm thinking of doing the walls musou black with the LIT floor. Would be always glowing
@@littlefishbigmountain take a picture of you canted towards a mirror one side normal the other side you in the mirror and tell me wish side is brighter
Maybe possible to implement this paint onto roads to help with visibility in some lower population areas if headlights of previous passing cars help light it up.
i would choose LIT. And again: Amazing content but the brightest shining thing in the video is your wonder and happiness when seeing results. Thats a bright light by itself! thank you for carrying that
I know it’s a joke/meme but I still don’t really get where it’s coming from. Whats wrong about being thankful and showing respect when someone safely brings you from A to B?
How warm does it need to be so a person can see it?....would it work in underground miles? They're about 60 degrees on average. The deep diamond mines in Africa are definitely hot enuff to stay lite if sprayed.
This is such a cool idea. Also: imagine a pitch-black maze covered with this pigment, but the only thing you have is a laserpointer. You can sketch out the walls using the laser finding your way to the exit.
I bet his next video with this room will be covering room in 100% reflecting paint and *blowing a thermonuclear warhead in center* Very very intriguing
It's amazing to see just how bright the paint is where it is thicker in some areas than others. I bet a second or third coat of the Lit would be phenomenal.
Just stumbled onto your channel. This is amazing! I was born in the late 50s. Back in the late 60s, there was a TV show called The 21st Century. They predicted that we would light our homes with light producing paint based on the idea that it would absorb sunlight during the day. Many of the predictions were way off. But it was a fun show to watch.
so, during the day, or with regular light bulbs in a room, is it just like an ordinary white wall painted room? if so, this seems like a really neat idea for a children's play room
I'm thinking of how it might help with low vision problems. Putting Lit paint in a room with maybe 60 watt light bulbs. It could make a huge difference!
@@SorakaOTP462 If it wasnt for the people who earn their living by making the tech you used to write this comment, you wont be able to share your shitty perspectives with world. So be thankful.
I heard a story about a guy working on some road-related stuff "borrowing" some white paint from the workplace to paint his basement, but it turned out it was retroreflective paint used for markings in the roadway. From what I heard, the room had some interesting light conditions.
How much pigment (lit) did you combine with a gallon of your white paint? I’m thinking of doing a project with this, any advise you could give would be greatly appreciated. Cheers. Really enjoying your videos!
4:53 its fun and games till you turn the light on and off ... see several human silhouettes on the walls ... but you are the only person inside the room.
But then he would of just told us he repainted instead of actually tearing the green screen up if he was lying he would not pay that much for 2 green screens
imagine being a kid and your parents own the world darkest room. Parent: That's it jimmy, into the void room you go, 30 minutes. jimmy: please, i don't wanna experience the void
The super nasal voice paired with his flat delivery. I totally hear what you're talking about. Every sentence ends with the exact same delivery. None of the dialog feels organic, but a string of one-off sentences. But ONLY in the scripted segments. His speech patterns sound pretty normal otherwise, but still a little odd.
@@Settiis Has anyone ever actually damaged their eye with a regular laser pointer? And obviously you'd have to make sure the child is somewhat responsible
Probably more expensive than just having the electricity there. Also, note that what he says in the video is wrong -- there's just no way this thing could glow indefinitely in a warm environment. That would be converting thermal energy directly into work, i.e., it would be a perpetual motion machine of the second kind. You warm the room to charge the paint (assuming this is at all possible, which is doubtful), and then you need to let it cool so it can discharge. It won't work unless there's a cold reservoir (i.e. the cold air) to dump the waste heat. So it could work to illuminate cooler nights after a warm day, but it wouldn't work to illuminate indoor environments during the day time.
@@isodoublet There is the possibility the the crystals in the "pigment" can up convert some frequency of infrared photons that all warm things emit to visible green photons by capturing and combining them. It wouldn't violate thermodynamics because it could be taking two infrared photons at an energy level of say 1.24 electron volts and combining them to get a green photon at say 2.40 electron volts. with the other 0.8 electron volts being lost as a lower energy photon (that is unusable by the system) or as vibrations in the crystal which are then dissipated into its surroundings or which are eventually scattered as multiple even lower energy photons. The useable energy in the system would still decrease over time. (I hope this is the case with this paint but I kinda doubt it). If the paint is like this you could just get concrete blocks or even stones, cover the top with carbon black (basically soot with an optional binding agent) to absorb as much heat as possible (given the economics of the situation) and paint the underside with this paint. Photovoltaic systems would be better in some ways but this would be a lot simpler (simple enough that even small children, the disabled and the illiterate could make these things. They would also be much more environmentally friendly as everything but the paint itself could be made from locally sourced materials that are literally as cheap and benign as dirt, they would last millions of cycles and even if they were damaged (even severely) they would still function. The other possibility (and is most likely) is the heat simply accelerates the release of any residual energy the is being stored in the pigment from the last time it was charged with high energy light. A similar thing happens with a chemically powered glow stick. If you activate a glow stick so it glows then (carefully) heat it up it will glow much brighter but for a much shorter time. It may still be useful as a low level light source as the glow can last for hours but it does mean that the painted surface would have to be moved into a light source every day, then move back to where light is need at night to be of much use. I might be buying some of this paint for a project soon. If I do I will certainly be testing whether it is truly thermoluminescent or not.
@@zachcrawford5 "here is the possibility the the crystals in the "pigment" can up convert some frequency of infrared photons that all warm things emit to visible green photons by capturing and combining them." That would still violate the second law. You can't take a high entropy energy source and turn it into low-entropy. The available energy in a system at thermal equilibrium is already zero; you literally can't extract any of it. Any such transformation where "the available energy in the system decreases" is only possible if the system is not in equilibrium. "The other possibility (and is most likely) is the heat simply accelerates the release of any residual energy the is being stored in the pigment from the last time it was charged with high energy light." Indeed.
Yeah, i have never seen black chicks with starbu-.... wait yes, as many as white ones,,, wow, does it really mean... you need informations before making a joke? yes it does.
How about a room mixing all 3, the Lit, Musou and 'Ultra reflective' - i.e. bounce a few balls inside? (Following a kindergarten experiment with coloured bouncing balls)
Better idea. Musou black floor and roof, LIT walls, like walking on the void. And you could splatter the ceiling with droplets of LIT so it looks like stars
Deserts are pretty dry, it means that without enough water in the air to hold tempeture, the temperature fluctuate pretty easily... At the time the sun goes down, the temperature drop with it to pretty much freezing temperatures.
@purringChaos It's magenta. A few decades ago some fashion designer called magenta "hot pink" and more recently people have started calling it just "pink". Pink is desaturated red -- On a CIE horseshoe-shaped gamut diagram, it's a region inward from the red edge. Magenta is on the straight line closing the arch, called the "purple line". It does not look "pink" at all, unless you call magenta pink.
@@aberrationeech.1838 anish kapoor 'owns' vantablack and make people pay for it at a high price to use it but stuart semple made another blackest black that's more affordable to everyone. I remember the pinkiest pink was also a product of his beefiness to him too if I'm not wrong. I also remember he also prohibits anish kapoor from using them. So there you go, one hella beef from a man, you can try search for threads or vids if his 'relationship' with anish kapoor, it's amazing 😂
@@RayDeoZa He doesn't own Vantablack, he has an exclusive license for the use of Vantablack in art. That's why people are pissed, he's preventing other artists from being able to try new things.